Wine goes with cheese because of something called 'mouthfeel'

Wine goes with cheese. Meat sandwiches go with a pickle. Green tea goes with Asian food. Sushi goes with pickled ginger. Oil goes with vinegar. Soda goes with chips. Many of the world's most beloved food combinations pair an astringent food, which causes the mouth to pucker up, with a fatty food, which makes the mouth feel slippery.

But why? "The kernel of this idea of pairing astringents with fats is found in gastronomies all over the planet, but it's never been clear how or why these pairings work," said Paul Breslin, an experimental psychologist at RutgersUniversity and Monell Chemical Senses Center who studies taste perception.

In a new paper published online Oct. 8 in the journal Cell, Breslin and colleagues propose a theory of food pairings that explains for the first time how astringent and fatty foods oppose one another to create a balanced "mouthfeel."

Because fat is oily, eating it lubricates the mouth, making it feel slick or even slimy, Breslin said. Meanwhile, astringents, chemical compounds such as the tannins in wine and green tea, make the mouth feel dry and rough. They do this by chemically binding with lubricant proteins present in saliva, causing the proteins to clump together and solidify, and leaving the surface of the tongue and gums without their usual coating of lubrication. [Tip of the Tongue: The 7 (Other) Flavors Humans May Taste]

We don't like slimy, but we don't like puckered up, either. "We want our mouth to be lubricated but not overly lubricated," Breslin told LiveScience. "In our study, we show that astringents reduce the lubricants in the mouth during a fatty meal and return balance."

Although this food-pairing idea had been proposed before, it was a mystery how that balance might actually be struck, because wine, green tea and the other widely consumed astringents are only mildly astringent. No one knew how they managed to cut the fat as well as they do. [Will People Really Be Forced to Stop Eating Meat?]

The researchers discovered that astringents have a stronger effect each time the mouth is exposed to them. Every time study participants took a sip of green tea, for example, they perceived it to be more astringent than during the previous sip, indicating that the astringents were reacting more strongly with the lubricating proteins in their mouths upon each exposure. This growth in astringency is why, even though tea and wine have only a weak effect at first, sipping them throughout a fatty meal eventually enables the astringents to counterbalance the strong lubricating effect of the fat.

A second experiment supported this conclusion. When the study participants alternated their sips of tea with bites of salami, the perceived slipperiness of their mouths (caused by the fatty salami) gradually decreased as they took more sips. When they sipped water, by contrast, the slimy feeling in their mouths continued to build.

The importance of repeated exposure explains why we don't tend to gulp down an entire glass of wine then eat our entire steak. Nor do we polish off our whole pickle before setting into our sandwich. The new research justifies the widespread use of astringent foods as "palate cleansers" that people sample throughout a meal.

This general principle of yin and yang food pairings goes part of the way in explaining gastronomy, but what about the specifics? Why do we pair sushi with pickled ginger rather than with a soda, despite the fact that they're both astringents? And why does cheese seem to taste better with red wine than with green tea?  As Breslin put it, "Is there something to the idea that a particular astringent and a particular fatty food go together?"

The famous pairings could simply be cultural accidents — a matter of which foods were available in which regions. But Breslin said it's also possible that cultures have unknowingly worked out the most balanced pairings based on the chemical properties of the foods.

"Different kinds of astringents give rise to different rates of growth of astringency. As you repeatedly sample them, one will have a steep rise and the other a shallow rise," he said. "It could be that there's a particular mixing of an astringent and a fatty food that determines how strong the astringent is going to be and how quickly it gets there. This is a mystery of gastronomy."

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Discuss this post

Here's another one of those studies that wind up reporting what you already knew. Just because someone took the time to explain it technically and made up a new word, I guess it's news. Next week, why you don't want to drink orange juice after brushing your teeth.

  • 1 vote
Reply#1 - Mon Oct 8, 2012 2:13 PM EDT

You say that, but did you actually know about astringency countering the greasiness of fatty foods? I mean, I knew that those combinations were right, but I didn't know the technical reason why.

Now I do and I find it interesting. If you already knew, congratulations, but for the rest of us, it's nice to learn new things.

Pizza and Beer!

  • 3 votes
#1.1 - Mon Oct 8, 2012 6:39 PM EDT
Reply

Haven't you ever heard the term, "Wine cleanses your pallet?" Ever wonder what that meant? This information is only about 5,000 years old.

    Reply#2 - Mon Oct 8, 2012 6:46 PM EDT

    When I drink too much, my mouth feels slippery and, I slur my words. Now I know why.

    • 1 vote
    Reply#3 - Mon Oct 8, 2012 7:51 PM EDT

    Good work Paul. And congrats on the Cell pub.

    • 1 vote
    Reply#4 - Mon Oct 8, 2012 8:05 PM EDT

    The article poses this information like it's some great, mysterious conundrum. It's not. The fats from the food coat your tongue, therefore inhibiting your taste buds' ability to really "enjoy" the next bite. The astringent properties of whatever you pair with the fatty food (for instance, the tannins in wine) work to strip that coating of fat from your tongue, making the next bite just as enjoyable as the first.

    It's awesome, to be sure, but it's not all that baffling to understand.

      Reply#5 - Mon Oct 8, 2012 9:54 PM EDT

      Why do saltine crackers taste good after you eat fudge?

        Reply#6 - Tue Oct 9, 2012 9:27 AM EDT

        Great. Now can they explain why Western people love cheese so much even though it smells like something our natural instinct would tell us never to put in our mouths?

        • 1 vote
        Reply#7 - Thu Oct 18, 2012 4:10 PM EDT
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